The Sustainable Land Use (SLU) and Nature Based Solution (NBS) … · important role –Water...
Transcript of The Sustainable Land Use (SLU) and Nature Based Solution (NBS) … · important role –Water...
The Sustainable Land Use (SLU) and Nature Based Solution (NBS)
Urban Agenda Partnership: Brief overview and focus on
Action 6 on better regulation
Claudia de Luca
Alma Mater Studiorum, Università di Bologna
THINKNATURE Webinar 5th June 2019
URBAN AGENDA for EU –Pact of Amsterdam
• May 30, 2016. 28 EU ministers responsible for urban policies sign the Pact of Amsterdam. This agreement establishes the Urban Agenda for the EU and lays down its fundamental principles.
• “The Urban Agenda for the EU is a new working method to ensure maximum utilization of the growth potential of cities and to successfully tackle social challenges. It aims to promote cooperation between Member States, cities, the European Commission and other stakeholders, in order to stimulate growth, livability and innovation in the cities of Europe”
URBAN AGENDA for EU
The heart of the Urban Agenda is the development of 12 partnerships related to 12 "urban challenges", thus allowing cities, Member States, EU institutions and stakeholders as NGOs and business partners, to work together to:
Better regulation - eliminate legislative barriers at local or national level
Better funding - ensure that funding actually reaches cities and funds are spent on their priorities; to talk more
about funding with the European Commission and with the Member States
Better knowledge base and knowledge exchange - make available the immense wealth of knowledge and
experience that each city develops.
URBAN AGENDA– 14 Priority Themes
From FUTURIUM platform: https://ec.europa.eu/futurium/en/urban-agenda
SUL and NBS Partnership:Members
• Urban Areas:Bologna (IT, Coordinator), Antwerp (BE), Cork (IE), Lille (FR), Águeda (PT), Stavanger (NO), Stuttgart (DE), Zagreb (HR)
• Member States:Poland (Coordinator), Cyprus, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Portugal, Slovenia
• Other participants and stakeholders:European Commission (DG REGIO, DG ENV, DG JRC, DG R&I), ICLEI,INCASÒL, European Investment Bank (EIB), EUROCITIES
• Observers:URBACT, The Netherlands, EEA, ISOCARP
SUL_NBS – objectives and vision
Inspiring principle• Ensure an efficient and sustainable use of land and natural resources, contribute to the development of
compact, liveable and inclusive European cities for all.General objectives• Promote a compact model of liveable city• Bring to the attention and spread the NBS as tools for the sustainability and liveability of urban spacesPriority focus• Land take/Land use• Under used urban area and brownfields• Functional Urban Areas - FUAs• Nature-based solutions - NBS
SUL-NBS: Action Plan Work flow and process:• A year of participatory work, seven project meetings, definition of 9 ACTIONS → included in a most
exhaustive ACTION PLAN• For each action have been identified: obstacles → objectives → timeline → responsible partners in the
implementation → expected results
Action N. and name Field Action Leader
1 INCLUDING LAND TAKE IN IMPACT ASSESSMENT PROCEDURES Bologna e UNIBO
2 FINANCING MODELS FOR BROWNFIELD DEVELOPMENT Luxembourg
3 IDENTIFYING AND MANAGING UNDER-USED LAND URBACT
4 INDICATORS OF LAND TAKE Bologna e UNIBO
5 PROMOTING FUA COOPERATION AS A TOOL TO MITIGATE URBAN SPRAWL Poland
6 BETTER REGULATION TO BOOST NBS AT EU AND LOCAL LEVEL Bologna e UNIBO
7 BETTER FINANCING ON NATURE-BASED SOLUTIONS (7.1 & 7.2) Zagreb
8 AWARENESS RAISING ON NATURE-BASED SOLUTIONS AND URBAN SPRAWL Bologna
9 DEVELOPING COMMON STANDARDS AND INDICATORS Stavanger
Action 6: Objectives
EU level:
Based on the review of EU instruments and legislation available, the Partnership believes thatthere is a need to better integrate NBS within existing directives and other existing EU-levellegislation and documents. Reference to the “urban environment” needs to be betterinvestigated to understand how the urban dimension should be integrated into EU policies andstrategies
Local level:
National and regional authorities and cities of the partnership intend to better understand towhich extent NBS has already been included and integrated into their national or localstrategies (climate adaptation, urban and master plans, resilience strategies, etc.) and to whatextent the existing minimum legal requirements already take NBS benefits into consideration, orthe need to further integrate NBS.
Action 6: Expected Outcomes
EU level:
• Recommendations to the EU Commission on a better integration of NBS’ within existingDirectives and other EU-level documents (reference to Water and Flood directive)
Local level:
• an overview of existing strategies where NBS play or could play an important role in the citiesparticipating in the action;
• an overview of existing minimum legal requirement on NBS in their urban plans andbuilding regulations;
• Proposing better integration of NBS into existing strategies (in terms of potential target andactions to achieve those) and into minimum legal requirements
Action 6: What have we done so far?EU level:• Review of main EU strategies, directives and roadmaps that
include, mention or refer to the concept of NBSs and greeninfrastructures
• Review of EU strategies, directives and roadmaps where NBSare not explicitly mentioned, but where they can play animportant role – Water Directive and Flood Directive
Local level:• First screening of legislation, standard and minimum legal
requirement in the cities and regions of our partnership• One workshop at the THINKNATURE Forum in Paris to discuss
about the topic with other interested parties
Action 6: examples from the partnership
Zagreb:
• The spatial plan of the city (2018) defines that new parkswithin urban areas will be shaped in accordance with thenatural features of the area and equipped according to theneeds of the inhabitants of the settlement and will normallyprovide 5 m2 of park area per inhabitant.
Bologna:
• Building urban code related with soil permeability; indeed the minimumpermeability should be ensured through the calculation of a specific indicator ofreduced building impact (RIE).
• Emilia Romagna region just released the new urban planning law (Regional law24/2017) where the former quantitative minimum legal requirements for greenareas has been implemented considering a wider and more qualitative point ofview.
Action 6: Further examples and thoughts from THINKNATURE Paris forum
Main thoughts of the session:
• Several good practices including NBSrequirement into legal planning mechanisms,most of them coming from Third countries orEU Northern countries (i.e. NL obligates tohave water storage on rooftops, Bilbaoimposed a minimum of green areas in itsmaster plan)
• There are often conflicting regulations (EUdirectives, national directives, local directives)Sometimes conflicting rules apply within asame city.
Action 6: Can minimum legal requirements and planning standards boost NBS uptakes?
Some thoughts from Paris Forum session:
Yes:we should set compulsory standards such as xx m² of green area per inhabitantYes, if we use measurable “green factors” for projects
Yes but:Yes, if we reverse the way of setting rules. For example: instead of setting a minimum of parking spots per building/district, set a maximum -> maximum instead of minimum
No: in some countries, e.g. USA, minimums might not work. It’s better to have guidelines
Action 6: Can minimum legal requirements and planning standards boost NBS uptakes?
If not, what could boost this process at local level?
Raising the awareness of citizens. With well aware people, regulations won’t be necessary
Start with a strategy and push it (especially by the mayor), if you want to achieve something
Provide more data and inputs, through several models, before making plans.
Future events and collaboration
We are looking for an expert on EU legislation on NBS!Interested? Please contact me!
Thank you for your [email protected]